Tuesday 30 December 2014

Tesco Colombian Coffee








Creamy mouthfeel. Toast flavours, and a moderate amount of acidity. A sort of all round coffee that doesn't have much individual character, but is clean and drinkable with flavours and mouthfeel that are quite attractive.

Date: Dec 2014   Score: 5


Bought in Tesco for £2.00 for 227g. The coffee comes from beans grown on the foothills of the Andes. Soft, does not have much impact. Some acidity, some powder, gentle bittering. A little crude. Late burnt toast notes. It has some character, and while crude is smooth enough. It grows on me as something that's OK. Good for the money.

Date: Oct 2015   Score: 4 - 5



Colombian coffee


Tesco Logo.svg
Tesco tea and coffee


Tuesday 16 December 2014

CafeDirect Exceptional Everyday Tea








£2.59 for 80 bags (80 "lovely bags" according to the box!). Available in most supermarkets. Cafedirect is a Scottish based coffee and tea distribution organisation that buys direct from growers, reinvests in growers, and has a majority of growers as shareholders. It was formed in 1989.

This is a decent cup of tea. Bright, refreshing, unfussy.  There's no character here, but it's very drinkable. It does  whjat it says on the box. It's a a good everyday cup of tea that you could serve to anyone. I'd be happy to buy this again.












Saturday 29 November 2014

Tesco French Fresh Ground Coffee 5






£2.20 for 227g. Creamy texture with pronounced burnt flavours. No character or charm, just straight ahead black toast. There's some bitterness, but it's acceptable. And the whole thing is quite drinkable, even if it does leave a greasy chemical burnt toast flavour on the tongue. This is not a great coffee, nor is it one I will be buying again, but it is easy drinking and it really doesn't matter how you make it, as you can't exactly ruin it. Robust, forgiving, and easy drinking. Use as a cheap base for milky coffee like cappuccino - why pay more?


3/10


Tesco Logo.svg
Tesco tea and coffee


Wednesday 26 November 2014

Mokate To Go! Cafe Cappuccino






Tastes like a coffee flavoured milky drink, just like all the other cappuccinos I've tried. It's not really coffee, but it's fun. I prefer the mocha.

Date: Nov 2014   Score: 2/10
***



Tuesday 25 November 2014

Mokate To Go! Cafe Mocha




Three packs of instant coffee powder with creamer for 99p at a 99p store. The Mokate company date themselves  to 1900 in what is now the Czech Republic, though the modern version of the company, which deals with coffee creamers, started in 1990. The company developed an instant cappuccino for the Polish market in 1992 and has grown steadily since.

This is a drinkable product. Easy to make, and attractive to look at. There's some coffee flavour and some chocolate flavour, and it's sweet and creamy. This is not a quality product, but it's fun and cheap.


Date: Nov 2014    Score:  3/10
***


Thursday 20 November 2014

Sainsbury's Continental Fairtrade ground coffee






Cheap and very cheerful. £2.30 for 227g, which is around a £1 per 100g. I found this to be a coffee lacking in character or interest, but great for everyday drinking. Fully roasted so the full flavour of the coffee comes forth, yet not harsh or bitter, this makes an easy drinking coffee packed with roasty, toasty flavours. There's no acidity (Continental is an extreme roast, usually used for espresso, so all acidity and local character is burned away in the roasting), which suits me. I am perfectly happy with this. It's very flexible and forgiving as regards amount of coffee or length of time, so I don't need to be fussy when measuring out the coffee nor when timing the brewing. Makes a decent and satisfying brew every time. Nice roasty flavours combined with a smooth oily sweetness.

I'll be trying more continental blends.

4/10

Sainsbury's own label tea and coffee

Coffee roasts


Monday 13 October 2014

Sainsbury's Italian style Fairtrade ground coffee







Medium strong roast 4. Roasty flavours in an unremarkable coffee. It's drinkable, but lacks character. OK for adding some burnt toast flavour to a blend. Not particularly strong. Quite easy drinking. OK


3/10


Coffee roasts




Sainsbury's own label tea and coffee

Saturday 20 September 2014

Waitrose Mocha Sidamo Coffee








Even though indicated as 3 on the British roast number scheme which puts it as a medium to dark roast, this is a burnt, dark roasted coffee in which all character has been removed, leaving only a burnt toast flavour. I have reduced the amount of coffee I use to half of normal, and cut down the brew time to half of normal, and it still delivers a powerful roast kick. Lovers of dark roasted coffees such as espresso would like this, but it's not for me. £3.29 for 227g from Waitrose.


2/10



Ethiopian coffee




Tuesday 26 August 2014

Tesco Finest Galapagos Islands coffee









Robustly flavoured, but mild tasting, with gentle acidity and moderate bitterness. Good body and pleasant roast flavours.This is a very attractive and drinkable coffee.







Grown on San Cristobal island one of the largest of the 87 islands in the Galapagos archipelago off the coast of Ecuador at an altitude of 400 to 900 feet (equivalent to 1350-2700 feet on the mainland due to the micro climate). The Bourbon variety beans were planted in 1875 by Don Manuel J Cobos. In 1904 the workers revolted against Cobos and killed him. The plantation was abandoned for over 120 years until the plantation was re-established in 1990. The micro-climate is so perfect that they continued their slow growth when the plantation was discovered

San Cristobal is in the archipelago and is the only location which benefits from abundant fresh spring water. Small rivers are fed by the El Junco volcanic crater lake down the rocky slopes on the southern side of the island. For centuries the islands were the refuge of pirates until the Ecuadorian Government took possession in 1832. Don Manuel Cobos imported the coffee seeds from Ethiopia with which he intended to supply to France. He planted 100 hectares on the Hacienda El Cafetal, the volcanic soil and atmospheric conditions contributing to the high quality of coffee produced.

Only 2000 to 3000 100lb (45kg) bags are produced each year, the main crop being September to December with a mid crop between late May and early July.

Galapagos-islands-tourguide.com
Galapagoscoffee.com
Seaislandcoffee.com
Treefrogcoffees.com


5/10



Tesco Logo.svg
Tesco tea and coffee

Tesco tea and coffee


Tesco Logo.svg



Tesco is the major British supermarket chain. It is now multinational, and is the second or third or fourth largest retailer in the world, depending on who is counting. It was founded as an unnamed market stall in Hackney in 1919 by Jack Cohen - the Tesco name came in 1924, when Cohen sold teas from a supplier with the initials TES, and he added the Co from his own name. The first Tesco store was opened in 1929 in Edgware.


Coffee



Tesco Finest Sumatra Mandheling Coffee Beans

Score: 8





Tesco Finest Honduras Coffee

Lovely! This is a smooth and deep coffee. Flavours are roasted almonds and chocolate - very deep and lazy. This isn't a grab you round the throat flavour hit, it's a fall into a pile of feather duvets flavour experience. Full bodied and well balanced, though with a little bit of powdery bitterness in the finish. A satisfying and pleasing coffee, though lacking intriguing or unusual flavours, and perhaps a bit too soft on the acidity (though I prefer that than being too hard). Initially nutty, then jammy fruit with a slight acidity, before moving to the mildly bitter finish. Chocolate notes throughout. Score: 7



Tesco Finest Guatemalan coffee

This is a rich, meaty coffee, with good roast notes combined with balancing acidity. It makes a decent cup of coffee, quite robust. Perhaps lacking in character and subtlety for me. It's not doing much, other than producing fairly strong coffee flavours. There's nothing extra going on. This is a solid everyday cup, but nothing special. I'd be quite happy to buy this again, and it's my favourite of the three Guatemalan coffees I have tried, but it's not one for when you want something different, or something interesting. Score: 6


Tesco Finest Costa Rican Coffee

Costa Rican coffee has a good reputation for solid tasty coffee beans - though is not too distinct from Colombian or better grades of Brazilian. It has a a creamy mouthfeel, lively but soft acidity, and good chocolate notes, quite smooth and milky. It is a pleasant coffee rather than an exciting one.

Score: 6


Tesco Finest Australian Skybury

This is an average quality coffee. It has mild chocolate, some lime and violets, caramel, and a powdery instant coffee bitterness in the finish. There's roast notes at the base, and some flowery vanilla and clove at the top. Work hard at the flavours and they'll come - but the main impression is of a standard coffee with a little too much powdery bitterness. There's nothing of interest here, and certainly nothing to justify the expense. It's drinkable, but then so are many other coffees at a fraction of the cost.




Tesco Finest Galapagos Islands coffee


Score: 5




Tesco Finest Colombian Supremo coffee beans


Soft, mild, pleasant. Bland and lacking in character. Score: 5



Tesco Original Fresh Coffee Beans 3

Score: 5



Tesco Colombian Coffee

A little crude, but roasty, and with some character. Score: 5



Everyday Value Roast & Ground Coffee

Score: 2






Creamy instant coffee



Green or herb tea


Tesco Peppermint Infusion
These are a good everyday peppermint tea - the flavour is strong and bright with an assertive peppermint when fresh, though can become a little cardboardy and/or less well defined after the foil has been broken - so best used as soon as possible, and wrap them up well. Excellent value and a good choice for those who like to drink peppermint tea often.




Tesco Finest Peppermint and Liquorice

 Score: 8




Tesco Camomile 

Score:  7





Flavoured tea


Tesco Finest Chocolate Tea


Black tea with 5% cocoa and a little bit of vanilla. Odd. Best drunk with milk.

Score: 4


Supermarket tea and coffee


Monday 25 August 2014

Twinings Liquorice Allsorts Earl Grey





Part of Twinings exploration of new twists on the success of Early Grey. The packaging is attractive, and the tea comes in silky pyramids with individual tags. Tends to be astringent and tannic, so either best with a splash of milk, or brewed for less than a minute. There is a distinct burnt toffee flavour married with oily dark tea and a zip of violets and citric. Finishes with a sweet note that is reminiscent of Liquorice Allsorts. Rather more interesting than pleasurable - I'm not entirely sure how successful this is, but I do like it. It's just that I'm not sure I like it enough to buy again. 15 tea bags for £4.49 makes it rather expensive - £9.98 per 100g.

Score: 3


Steepster



Twinings



Wednesday 20 August 2014

Aldi Specially Selected Java Coffee






New packet design. I don't know if they are using the same supplier, but this tastes smoother to me. There's no character to it (roasted to strength 5, and there wouldn't be character left in any coffee bean I suspect), but it's OK for an everyday coffee. It's easy to make - quite forgiveable of temperature, brewing time, and amount fluctuations.  I use a standard three scoops, and water just off the boil, and plunge when I'm ready. It's clean, with a hint of spice. But there's little roast or chocolate or any of those flavours that I normally get with a strong roast. There's no acidity eitehr, which makes it easy drinking, but it just slips down, really, without being noticed. That's it's main claim I suppose - it is bland coffee.  But sometimes that's all we want.

Date: Feb 2017  Score: 3





This has a picture of a leaping leopard - the Javan leopard I assume - along with the phrase "cat that got the cream". My first wife used to use that phrase, but it certainly wasn't in association with coffee (or with cats, or with cream). Anyway, this is a rough coffee that is best served with cream or milk to make it palatable.

Poor stuff really. I can now see why Java coffee is usually blended, and why it's used more for its robustness than for its character or flavour.





Date: Aug 2016    Score: 2





A pronounced but not aggressive bitterness.  Good mouthful of apricot fruit and gentle acidity initially, which cleanses the mouth. Overall quite smooth, though finishing with a little grungy and powdery bitterness that lingers in the back of the mouth. Overall quite acceptable for a strong coffee with a  roast strength of 5, though doesn't really call attention to itself in any positive way.

This is an Aldi own brand coffee, selected by the Aldi coffee buyer, Sandra Byrne, part of a range of single origin coffees sold at £1.99 for 200g.

Date: Aug 2014    Score: 3


***

Indonesian coffee


Aldi tea and coffee


Sunday 10 August 2014

Three Sixty Ethiopia Yirgacheffe








Interesting looking packaging which gives the look and feel of an independent local coffee roaster rather than the global company, UCC, which it is. UCC was founded in Japan in 1933, and is noted for making the world's first canned coffee, "UCC Coffee with Milk", in 1969. It is made clear on the company website that the Three Sixty brand is more about the marketing than the coffee, and is aimed at the customer who is curious about provenance. The coordinates on the packet locate to the town of Yirgacheffe rather than the plantation where the beans were grown, so it is clear that this is a gimmick. Type in Yirgacheffe and you get the same result - indeed, you get a more informative response, as the results come from a wider range of sources which provide more information about Yirgacheffe coffee.

The packet was bought from Waitrose for £4.99, so is more expensive than most other supermarket available coffees, but cheaper than online dealers, especially with regard to Yirgacheffe which tends to carry a premium.

I've not been happy with it. I keep trying it in different strengths, and leaving it to brew for different lengths of time, but I find it too strong and bitter for my palate, with few contrasts. It tends to sit heavy in the mouth with an insistent dark, almost stale, bitterness like instant coffee .There's some acidity, but it's not floral or fruity, just acidic. I have yet to find anything pleasant about this coffee, and now that I find it's not made by an independent as I first thought, but by a global coffee company, which also owns Lyons coffee, I am giving up on finding the subtly and character than I thought I was missing, as it appears it's not been there in the first place.


3/10




Ethiopian coffee